Need another word that means the same as “revolutionized”? Find 30 related words for “revolutionized” in this overview.
Table Of Contents:
Associations of "Revolutionized" (30 Words)
atavism | A tendency to revert to something ancient or ancestral. The more civilized a society seems to be the more susceptible it is to its buried atavism. |
change | Money given in exchange for the same sum in larger units. He is going to be worse for the next two or three days because the moon has changed. |
countermand | An order revoking a previous one. He was already countermanding her. |
coup | A direct pocketing of the cue ball, which is a foul stroke. He was overthrown in an army coup. |
dramatic | (of a person or their behaviour) intending or intended to create an effect; theatrical. With a dramatic gesture she put a hand to her brow. |
fend | Look after and provide for oneself, without any help from others. The youngsters had to fend for themselves after their parents died. |
flip | The act of flipping a coin. A quick flip through my cookery books. |
funnel | Guide or channel something through or as if through a funnel. A funnel of light fell from a circular ceiling. |
inverse | Something inverted in sequence or character or effect. A term is in inverse proportion to another term if it increases or decreases as the other decreases or increases. |
inversion | A transformation in which each point of a given figure is replaced by another point on the same straight line from a fixed point especially in such a way that the product of the distances of the two points from the centre of inversion is constant. Administration officials admit that their new effort to deter corporate inversions won t actually stop the practice. |
invert | Put upside down or in the opposite position, order, or arrangement. When forming a question invert the subject and the verb. |
locative | A word in the locative case. |
obverse | Of or denoting the obverse of a coin or medal. True solitude is the obverse of true society. |
opposite | Of angles between opposite sides of the intersection of two lines. The opposite sex. |
overthrow | A score made because the ball has been overthrown. The Czar was overthrown. |
overturn | Cause to overturn from an upright or normal position. The crowd proceeded to overturn cars and set them on fire. |
rearrange | Change (the position, time, or order of something. She rearranged her skirt as she sat back in her chair. |
renovate | Restore (something old, especially a building) to a good state of repair. They renovated the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel. |
replacement | A person who follows next in order. A hip replacement. |
retrograde | Show retrograde motion. Our history must retrograde for the space of a few pages. |
reversal | An adverse change of fortune. The reversal of the image in the lens. |
reverse | Reverse the position order relation or condition of. The ship s engines reversed and cut out altogether. |
setback | An unfortunate happening that hinders or impedes; something that is thwarting or frustrating. They had to get permission to overlap the city s setback lines. |
subvert | Destroy completely. We must not let our civil liberties be subverted by the current crisis. |
takeover | An act of assuming control of something, especially the buying out of one company by another. A company threatened with takeover. |
throwback | Characteristic of an atavist. A lot of his work is a throwback to the fifties. |
transposition | The act of reversing the order or place of. He wrote a textbook on the electrical effects of transposition. |
turnabout | A sudden and complete change or reversal of policy, opinion, or of a situation. The move was a significant turnabout for the company. |
turnaround | Time need to prepare a vessel or ship for a return trip. It was a remarkable turnaround in his fortunes. |
upset | The act of upsetting something. The dam will upset the ecological balance. |